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Home > Explore! > Coastal Marine Geology > State of Maine's Beaches > The Beaches > Western and Ferry Beaches

State of Maine's Beaches in 2007

Western Beach and Ferry Beach, Scarborough

Background geology and characteristics

Western and Ferry Beaches location map
Figure 30
Western Beach is a roughly 1 km pocket beach, oriented northwest-southeast and located on the western shore of Prouts Neck, adjacent to the Scarborough River. It is bound by Prouts Neck to the southeast and Ferry Rock to the northwest. Ferry Beach curves almost circularly from Ferry Rock to Black Point, another bedrock outcrop to the north (Nelson, 1979). Ferry Beach is partly a pocket fringing beach and partly a pocket barrier beach. Both beaches are located at the mouth of the Scarborough River. A forest and a golf fairway are found behind Western and Ferry Beaches.
Historically, the shorelines of both Ferry Beach and Western Beach have been stable (Nelson and Fink, 1980). Numerous paleo-dune ridges, cross-cutting one another, suggest a complex history of episodic erosion and accretion at Western Beach. Studies by Nelson (1979) and Timson (1989; 2003) indicated general accretion along Western Beach until the late 1970s. The channel for the Scarborough River was stabilized by the USACE in 1962. It appears that, as a result of the stabilization, Western Beach underwent progradation until about 1978. MGS postulates that this was most likely caused by the abandonment of sand shoals on the east side of the stabilized channel, which over time migrated to the northeast by wave action and welded onto Western Beach, until the sediment was depleted (Slovinsky, 2006).
Western Beach, since 1978, appears to be undergoing a period of recession since the sediment that fed its shoreline is not being replenished by regular shoal bypassing events, inhibited by the main channel of the Scarborough River. Shoal bypassing has continued to a limited extent, evidenced by the regular shoaling of the main channel. Records of dredging at the Scarborough River indicate that large amounts of sediment are being removed from the system through maintenance dredging, thus not allowing the majority of sediment to successfully bypass the inlet and weld onto the Western Beach shoreline. The sand shoals that are currently reaching Western Beach (that are not removed by dredging), are not of a sufficient volume to sustain a stable or prograding shoreline. Western Beach has undergone dramatic erosion since the 1980s, and has received sediment through a beach nourishment project in 2005.
Western Beach and Ferry Beach have a total of 4 beach profiles, WS1-WS4, with 2 profiles (WS1 and WS2) located along Ferry Beach and 2 along Western Beach (WS3 and WS4) (Figure 30). WS4 was lost and not relocated. Several of the beach profiles (WS1 and WS3) along Western Beach and Ferry Beach were surveyed by MGS in June 2006. In February 2007, MGS resurveyed the profiles and established a new network of profiles. WS1 and WS3 will be renamed as WS5 and WS7, respectively. A new WS6 will be in the vicinity of WS2, and WS8 will be located farther southeast on Western Beach. The next update and analysis of profiles will include these new locations.

Annual and seasonal beach profile changes

The beach profiles at Western and Ferry Beach start behind the frontal dune crest. Data collected along Western and Ferry beaches in Scarborough were quite confusing due to the number of times it appears that front and back stakes were used, and changed position. The analysis of the data broke each profile (WS1-WS3) down into a front stake (FS) and back stake (BS).

Data were collected at the WS1 front stake (FS) between 1999-2001. Through the data collection period, the mean profiles show consistent sediment loss along the profile from about 15 m from the pin and farther seaward, with the gain and development of a slight berm at around the 10 m mark (Figure 31). Seasonal data from WS1FS indicate that the summer and winter profile shapes are very similar out to about the 15 m mark (elevation of about 2 m); past this, the summer profile is more voluminous (Figure 32); however, standard deviation data indicate that the winter profile past this point is more variable (up to 40 cm), while the summer profile is more stable, with variations up to about 20 cm (Figure 33a).

mean annual profiles at WS1FS
Figure 31
mean seasonal profiles at WS1FS
Figure 32
standart deviation data for WS1FS, WS1BS, WS2FS, WS2BS
Figure 33
mean annual profiles at WS1BS
Figure 34
mean annual profiles at WS1BS
Figure 35

For WS1BS, a data set between 2001 and 2006 was collected. Analysis indicates that the profile has been variable, but eroded during the overall time period (Figure 34). Between 2001-2002, the profile gained sediment; from 2002-2003, it remained stable to slightly accretive. From 2003-2004, the profile lost a significant volume of sediment along the majority of its length; maximum loss appears to be on the order of 0.5 m. Between 2004-2005, the profile gained some sediment, and then lost sediment between 2005-2006. On a seasonal basis, data indicate that WS1BS underwent typical summer and winter changes, with the summer mean exhibiting more sediment along the profile than the winter mean (Figure 35). Maximum and minimum profile envelopes indicate that up to 1.5 m of variability in the profile shapes has occurred. Based on standard deviation data, both profiles can be variable vertically (almost up to 60 cm), with maximum variability at 20 m offshore, and around 45 m offshore (Figure 33b).

Data at WS2FS were collected between 1999-2000; the horizontal length of the data set is very short. The mean profiles indicate a loss of approximately 0.5 m of sediment along the length of the profile over the two years (Figure 36). Seasonal data indicate the expected differences in summer vs. winter profile shapes (Figure 37). Summer berm development, evidenced in the standard deviation data, is highly variable, up to 60 cm (Figure 33c).

mean annual profiles at WS2FS
Figure 36
mean seasonal profiles at WS2FS
Figure 37
mean annual profiles at WS2BS
Figure 38
mean seasonal profiles at WS2BS
Figure 39

WS2BS annualized mean data show steady accretion along the entire profile, with the buildup of a dune crest at around 12 m from the pin (gaining about 0.5 m in elevation). Farther offshore, the profile gained much more sediment (Figure 38). The most marked change was between 2004-2005, with over 1 m of accretion. This may be due to the migration of sediment into this area due to the beach nourishment project completed in December 2005. The accretion continued into 2006. Surprisingly, the winter profile for WS2BS shows more sediment volume along the profile than the summer profile (Figure 39). This may be attributed to the influence of the beach nourishment, since the nourishment project was completed during the winter of 2005, this might skew the winter data. Variability for summer and winter data is relatively low until about 15 m, when vertical variability reaches about 50 cm; seaward of this, variability steadily increases for both summer and winter data, with winter standard deviation values peaking at 100 cm (1 m) at about 38 m from the mark, and summer values approaching 140 cm (1.4 m, Figure 33d).

Data at WS3FS were collected between 1999-2003. Mean profiles show a relative stability to slight accretion along the overall profile length (Figure 40). Seasonal profile comparison indicates a slightly more sediment-rich profile during the summer, and slightly greater variability than the winter (Figure 41, Figure 42a).

mean annual profiles at WS3FS
Figure 40
mean seasonal profiles at WS3FS
Figure 41
standard deviation data for WS3FS, WS3BS, WS4
Figure 42
mean annual profiles at WS3BS
Figure 43
mean seasonal profiles at WS3BS
Figure 44

WS3BS data were collected from 2003-2006. There was little change between 2003-2004, then substantial accretion between 2004-2005, likely due to the influence of nourishment (Figure 43). There was some erosion between 2005-2006. Seasonally, WS3BS shows little variation until around 80 m from the pin (Figure 44); here, the winter profile appears to have slightly more sediment. Standard deviation data indicate a variable dune and berm during the summer (with vertical changes up to 40 cm), with winter variability being much less, on the order of 20-25 cm (Figure 42b).

mean annual profiles at WS4
Figure 45
mean seasonal profiles at WS4
Figure 46

Data at WS4 were collected from 1999 through 2001; the mark was never surveyed by MGS before it was lost. Profile data indicate that the shoreline underwent erosion between 1999-2000, with slight recovery in 2001, though a large offshore bar that was present in 1999 did not reappear (Figure 45). Seasonal data indicate generally that the winter profile held more sediment than the summer profile shape (Figure 46). Standard deviation data showed relatively high (up to 40 cm) variability along both summer and winter profiles alike (Figure 42c).

Profiles along Western and Ferry Beaches are heavily influenced by the flood- and ebb-tidal formations associated with the Scarborough River. The river, which is flood dominated, tends to store large amounts of sediment within the flood-tidal shoals, adjacent to Ferry Beach. Beach and dune growth (and erosion) is episodic, dependent upon the movement of these shoals. Anthropogenic influence in the form of beach nourishment also has an impact on the shapes of the profiles, especially along Western Beach proper. The nourishment material, over time, should end up in the flood-tidal delta of the river, where sediment is sequestered. Erosion of Western Beach proper will likely continue unless sediment is delivered to the beach at a rate equal to that of the natural shoal bypass rate at the Scarborough River (a good estimate of this is the rate that the dredged river channel shoals).


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Last updated on January 3, 2008